方法对比
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| Program Budgeting (PPBS)× | Performance-Based Budgeting× | |
|---|---|---|
| 领域 | Public Administration | Public Administration |
| 方法族 | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| 起源年份≠ | 1965 | 1966 |
| 提出者≠ | David Novick & RAND Corporation; Allen Schick | Allen Schick |
| 类型≠ | Budgeting and planning system | Budgeting methodology |
| 开创性文献 | Schick, A. (1966). The Road to PPB: The Stages of Budget Reform. Public Administration Review, 26(4), 243–258. DOI ↗ | Schick, A. (1966). The Road to PPB: The Stages of Budget Reform. Public Administration Review, 26(4), 243–258. DOI ↗ |
| 别名 | PPBS, Planning-Programming-Budgeting System, Program Budgeting, Programme Budgeting | PBB, Performance Budgeting, Results-Based Budgeting, Outcome-Based Budgeting |
| 相关 | 4 | 4 |
| 摘要≠ | Program budgeting, formalised as the Planning-Programming-Budgeting System (PPBS), structures the budget around the government's objectives and the programs that serve them rather than around organisational units or input line items. It couples that program structure with systematic analysis of alternative ways to achieve each objective, multi-year cost projections, and cost-effectiveness comparison. Developed at the RAND Corporation and set out in David Novick's 1965 edited volume, it was adopted across the U.S. federal government under Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and President Johnson. Allen Schick's 1966 essay 'The Road to PPB' placed it as the culmination of budgeting's evolution toward a planning orientation. | Performance-based budgeting is an approach to public budgeting that connects the funds allocated to programs with the results those programs are expected to and actually do deliver. Rather than appropriating money by line items such as salaries and supplies, it organises the budget around programs with stated objectives and performance indicators, so that resource decisions can be informed by what the money buys in terms of outputs and outcomes. Allen Schick's classic 1966 analysis of budget reform traced how budgeting evolved from controlling inputs toward management and planning orientations, of which performance budgeting is a central strand, and the OECD has documented its modern variants across member governments. |
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